Sea Buckthorn Combines With

Taste of Sea Buckthorn

Parts Used

Whole Plant

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Description

Sea Buckthorn is a shrub with willow shaped leaves and sharp thorns.Sea Buckthorn berries are juicy and orange in color.It is deciduous.It grows in tropical, subtropical climate.It grows up to 7 M.Best used for Skin Diseases.

Sea Buckthorn for Skin

Sea Buckthorn is a rich source of Vitamins and Fatty Acids. These nutrients are essential for healthy teeth and gums. Add 1 to 2 teaspoons of dried Sea Buckthorn herb in a cup of hot water. Let it infuse for 15 minutes. Use it for swishing and Drink. Repeat the process 2 to 3 times a day.

It is a wonderful application. can further improve by adding hindi names of herbs and off line data availability. thank you, well done

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Promila

24 Nov 2015

Dear Sohail Bhatti

Yeah !! the website is really very informative. I am a student, and trust me I do refer to this website a lott.. For all my research papers. Satisfactory content. Well done guys.!! Keep up the good work.

And what are you saying, hindi names are already provided on the website. Well!! for most of the herbs it is there.

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Jitu( India )

14 Apr 2017

what is the hindi name of sea buck thorn?

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Sweta

19 Apr 2017

Dhurchuk is the hindi name of this herb.

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Anonymous

29 Apr 2018

I have advanced toenail fungus which recently gives intermittent painon the big toe.Sea buckthorn is listed as "super effective", but what it does it containthat can kill the fungus? And how do you use it for nail fungus - topically, or orally? Or both?Incidentally, I found a reference to nail fungus and turmeric. It said turmeric protects nail fungus, but when blue light is shone onto a nail coatedwith turmeric, the turmeric then kills the fungus (please do not look directly at theblue light if you try this, it can damage your eyes). There are new experimental drugs (porphyrins), not yet available,which rapidly eradicate the fungus, even in a single session,when they are activated by white light or red light. Even sunlight might work.Red light is preferred to blue light because it will transmit better througha fungus-infected, thickened toenail, and is safer to look at than bluelight (of course, you still shouldn't stare at it). However, light alone will not kill the fungus. So are there any antifungalherbs that might work even better if activated by white light?

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Anonymous

29 Apr 2018

Correction: The reference said that "ground-state curcumin had a protective effect and caused a decrease in macrophage-induced destruction of T. rubrum cells (p<0.05)". This means it was curcumin, (not turmeric), that protected the fungus if the curcumin was not photoactivated (irradiated with light). I don't know whether the same holds true for whole turmeric as for curcumin, but it might. And the same reference adds: "Though other studies attribute innate antifungal properties to ground-state curcumin [38–40] {ground-state means not excited by light}, in the present work none of the concentrations evaluated were fungicidal". Well, turmeric is widely held to combat nail fungus even without irradiating it with light. When we use turmeric against nail fungus, do we need to shine light on the nail or not? What does experience tell us?

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